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A 5% upgrade on a six-lane freeway (three lanes in each direction) is 1.25 mi long. On this segment of freeway, the directional peak-hour volume is 3800 vehicles with 2% large trucks and 4% buses (no recreational vehicles), the peak-hour factor is 0.90, and all drivers are regular users. The lanes are 12 ft wide, there are no lateral obstructions within 10 ft of the roadway, and the total ramp density is 1.0 ramps per mile. A bus strike will eliminate all bus traffic, but it is estimated that for each bus removed from the roadway, seven additional passenger vehicles will be added as travelers seek other means of travel. What are the density, volume-to-capacity ratio, and level of service of the upgrade segment before and after the bus strike?

User Boleto
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1 Answer

4 votes

Answer:

a) Density of the road segment

i) Before bus strike = 23.02 pc/mi/In

ii) after bus strike = 25.76 pc/mi/In

b) Volume to capacity ratio

i) Before bus strike = 0.69

ii) After bus strike = 0.78

C) level of service of the upgrade segment

i) Before bus strike = LOS C

ii) after bus strike = LOS D

Step-by-step explanation:

a) Density of the road segment

i) before bus strike ( D1 )

D1 = 1662 / 72.18 = 23.02 pc/mi/In

ii) After bus strike ( D2 )

D1 = 1859 / 72.18 = 25.76 pc/mi/In

b) Volume to capacity ratio

i) Before bus strike ( v 1 )

V1 = 1662 / 2400 = 0.69

ii) After bus strike ( V2 )

V2 = 1859 / 2400 = 0.78

C) level of service of the upgrade segment ( Gotten from " LOS Criteria for basic freeway segments " )

i) Before bus strike = ( LOS C )

ii) After bus strike = LOS D

Attached below is the detailed solution to the question above

A 5% upgrade on a six-lane freeway (three lanes in each direction) is 1.25 mi long-example-1
A 5% upgrade on a six-lane freeway (three lanes in each direction) is 1.25 mi long-example-2
User Droidbot
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